Saturday, September 6, 2008, 9:28PM ET - U.S. Markets Closed.

Robert Kiyosaki Why the Rich Get Richer

Robert Kiyosaki, Why the Rich Get Richer

When Pessimism Prevails, It's Time to Get Rich

by Robert Kiyosaki

Good (1022 Ratings)
2.8796462/5
Posted on Tuesday, July 22, 2008, 12:00AM

If you're serious about getting rich, now is the time. We've entered a period of mass-produced pessimism, when bad news is everywhere, and the best time to invest is when optimists become pessimists.

The Weird Turn Pro

Journalist Hunter S. Thompson used to say, "When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro." That's true in investing, too: At the height of every market boom, the weird turn into professional investors. In 2000, millions of people became professional day traders or investors in dotcom companies. Mutual funds had a record net inflow of $309 billion that year, too.

In an earlier column, I stated that it was time to sell all nonperforming real estate. My market indicator? A checkout girl at the local supermarket, who handed me her real estate agent card. She was quitting her job to become a real estate professional.

As a bull market turns into a bear market, the new pros turn into optimists, hoping and praying the bear market will become a bull and save them. But as the market remains bearish, the optimists become pessimists, quit the profession, and return to their day jobs. This is when the real professional investors re-enter the market. That's what's happening now.

Pessimism vs. Realism

In 1987, the United States experienced one of the biggest stock market crashes in history. The savings and loan industry was wiped out. Real estate crashed and a federal bailout entity known as the Resolution Trust Corporation, or the RTC, was formed. The RTC took from the financially foolish and gave to the financially smart.

Right on schedule 20 years later, Dow Industrials and Transports struck their last highs together in July 2007. Since then, nothing but bad news has emerged. In August 2007 a new word surfaced in the world's vocabulary: subprime. That October, I appeared on a number of television shows and was asked when the market would turn and head back up. My reply was, "This is a bad one. The worst is yet to come."

Many of the optimistic TV hosts got angry with me, asking me why I was so pessimistic. I told them, "The difference between an optimist and a pessimist is that a pessimist is a realist. I'm just being realistic."

As we all know, things only got worse in early 2008, with the demise of Bear Stearns and the Federal Reserve stepping in to save investment bankers. In February, many of those optimistic TV (and print) reporters became pessimists -- and when journalists become pessimists, the public follows. By March, mutual funds had a net outflow of $45 billion as investors fled the market.

Surviving the Bad Times

Back in 1987, as savings and loans closed and investors' stock and real estate portfolios were wiped out, my wife, Kim, and I were living in Portland, Ore. Many people were depressed and hiding from the truth. The following year, I said to Kim, "Now is the time for you to begin investing."

In 1989, she purchased a two-bedroom, one-bathroom house for $45,000, putting $5,000 down and earning $25 a month in positive cash flow. Today, she owns over 1,400 units and -- because more people are renting than buying -- she earns hundreds of thousands a year in positive cash flow.

The period from 1987 to 1995 was a rough one, even for the rich. In his book "The Art of the Comeback," my friend Donald Trump writes about being a billion dollars down at the time. Rather than give up, he kept on fighting to survive. He and I often talk about how that period was great for character development.

Two-Year Warning

I believe we're through the worst of the current bust. I know there will be more aftershocks, and the news will continue to be pessimistic for at least two more years, possibly until the summer of 2010.

But the upside to this is that it gives us at least two years to do our market research and find the next big stock or real estate bargain. Before buying, I strongly suggest you study, read books, and take courses on your asset of choice. If your choice is stocks, take a course on stocks or options. If it's real estate, take a course on real estate. Now is the time to learn; not only will you know more than the average person and be in a good position when the market turns, but you'll also meet people with a similar mindset.

You have about two years to get into position. Opportunities this big don't come along often, so this is your time to get rich.

Climbing Bulls, Flying Bears

Am I optimistic for the long-term? Absolutely not. I still believe we're due for the mother of all market crashes, and that the U.S. economy is running on borrowed time -- and I do mean borrowed. I think most baby boomers are in serious financial trouble, and that oil will climb above $200 a barrel. Inflation will also increase, causing more pain for the poor and middle class.

The Fed is flooding the market with nearly a trillion dollars of liquidity, which is why I believe gold under $1,200 an ounce and silver under $30 an ounce are bargains. Gold and silver should peak and decline before 2020, completing two 20-year cycles. My exit is to sell silver around 2015. I plan to hold onto gold, income-producing real estate, oil wells, and stocks.

Most of us know the bull climbs slowly up the stairs, but the bear jumps out the window. I believe the bull is still climbing the stairs, and the bear hasn't jumped yet. But rest assured that it will.

Rate This story

Good (1022 Ratings)
3/5
Sign-in to rate!

400 Comments

Showing comments 1-5 of 400Next >>
Sort: first to last
  • Yahoo! Finance User - Tuesday, September 2, 2008, 9:37PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    "Heed RK's opinions folks - for your own good" heed his main opinion / argument "get financially educated" and see if this week/month etc opinion from any chatterer makes sense to you ! anyone who looked at commodity price charts over differing periods would have seen the regular summer metal dip phenomenon. Obviously if you think metals are the buy for the next year or so, take that into account

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, September 1, 2008, 10:51AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    RK is the one of the biggest FOOL in the world, even bigger FOOLS and MORONS are the ones who gives RK a 5 star. I hear about Warren Buffet all the time but never ever this Stupid Fool, because Buffet made billions in Investing, RK made millions selling books to Idiots and lost millions in real-estate crash...

  • Don F - Thursday, August 28, 2008, 6:49PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    Best article he's ever written, I think.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Wednesday, August 27, 2008, 1:34PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    RK is right about the 2 year window. Don't buy until the real bargains show up. Use the next two years to build liquidity. Accumulate as much cash in US dollars as possible - your dollars will go up in value at the same time that home prices bottom out, doubling your growth when real estate rebounds. If you own a home, open a mortgage savings account. By combining your checking and savings account with your mortgage to offset the principal balance, you can save mortgage interest while building liquidity. A powerful concept that Australians have used for 20 years. Google "mortgage savings accounts" or check www.maxhouse.com. Get liquid because the bargains are coming!

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Wednesday, August 27, 2008, 4:11AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    He thinks gold under $1200 and silver under $30 is a bargain. I've also heard him saying cash is trash and you should keep all your liquid money in gold and silver ETF's. So if you headed his advice after you read this article and kept all your savings in precious metals, you would have taken a 20-30% loss in the last month... OUCH! So much for cash is trash... the dollar rebounded and metals went in the toilet. This is the problem with "long term" investing. You have the bulls on one shoulder giving you the optimistic pitch and the bears on the other giving you the pessimist pitch. Whether it's stocks, commodities, or real estate, if you invest in something and your timing is bad you can lose a lot of money. Yes, long term precious metals may skyrocket, but they may not. The fact is that there is a good time to buy metals and a bad time. Robert never told you that. He should have cautioned people to do some research to decide when to jump into metals. If he had done some of his own, he would have mentioned that metals were overdue for a big correction. That this has occured ever summer for the last five years. Now is the best time to buy metals while they at a yearly low. In the fall metals have typically rebounded and posted big gains. So I agree with Robert that long term metals are good, but don't just jump in and buy all at once or you risk taking a big loss like we saw in the last major correction. If you have $100,000 to invest, buy in $10,000 increments over the course of ten weeks or ten months. This way you can average in and not get caught with your pants down. For example if you had just rushed out and bought $100K worth of gold and silver after you read this article you'd only have $80K right now. If you had only started with $10K you would have only lost $2000 and now you could be loading up at very cheap prices!

Showing comments 1-5 of 400Next >>
The columns, articles, message board posts and any other features provided on Yahoo! Finance are provided for personal finance and investment information and are not to be construed as investment advice. Under no circumstances does the information in this content represent a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security. The views and opinions expressed in an article or column are the author's own and not necessarily those of Yahoo! and there is no implied endorsement by Yahoo! of any advice or trading strategy.

"Once you discover what you really want to do, your coach provides the discipline to keep your agreements with yourself -- just as my rich dad provided the discipline for me." -- Robert Kiyosaki

Take a look at where you are right now and then consider where you want to be. Your coach will help you get there. Click here to find out more about Rich Dad's Coaching.

More from Yahoo! Sources

  • CNN Money
  • Consumer Reports
  • Kiplinger
  • The Motley Fool
  • Business Week
  • Wall Street Journal